LAW OF TORTS

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LAW OF TORTS

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LAW OF TORTS WEEKEND LECTURE 2A Lecturer: Greg Young Contact: greg.young_at_lawyer.com NEGLIGENCE Duty of care & Breach: Civil Liability Act Damage PURE ECONOMIC LOSS – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: LAW OF TORTS


1
  • LAW OF TORTS
  • WEEKEND LECTURE 2A
  • Lecturer Greg YoungContact greg.young_at_lawyer.co
    m
  • NEGLIGENCE
  • Duty of care Breach Civil Liability Act
  • Damage
  • PURE ECONOMIC LOSS
  • VICARIOUS/CONCURRENT LIABILITY

2
IMPACT OF THE CIVIL LIABILITY ACT ON THE DUTY OF
CARE
  • The Civil Liability Act 2002 together with the
    Civil Liability Amendment (Personal
    Responsibility) Act 2002 govern the law of
    negligence in NSW.
  • The Civil Liability Act 2002 was enacted 28th
    May 2002 and received assent on 18 June 2002
  • Rationale behind the legislation
  • to limit the quantum of damages for personal
    injury and death in public liability instances
    resultantly lowering insurance premiums.
  • to discourage over litigation, by the
    imposition of restrictions and obligations and
    responsibilities upon plaintiffs and counsel

3
Torts Law Reform Stage 1
  • The 1st stage aimed both at the number of claims
    as well as at the cost of claims
  • restriction of legal advertising, minimising the
    promotion of claims and a restriction on the
    amount recoverable for legal costs
  • capping damages, applying a higher discount rate
    to the final lump sum figure, and the abolition
    of punitive damages

4
Torts Law Reform Stage 2
  • The 2nd Stage reforms include a range of
    broad-based tort reform measures, including a
    fundamental re-assessment of the law of
    negligence
  • addressing the concept of reasonable
    foreseeability in the law of negligence
  • protection of good samaritans who assist in
    emergencies
  • waivers for risky activities
  • statutory immunity for local government public
    authorities which fail to exercise their powers
    will not breach any duty
  • changing the test for professional negligence to
    one of 'peer acceptance'
  • abolishing reliance by plaintiffs on their own
    intoxication preventing people from making
    claims where they were injured in the course of
    committing a crime
  • provide a wider range of options for damages
    creating a presumption in favour of structured
    settlements.

5
Claims excluded from operation of the Civil
Liability Act s3B(1)
  • a) an intentional act that is done with intent to
    cause injury or death or that is sexual assault
    or other sexual misconduct. Note Part 7 does
    apply to intentional torts done with intent to
    injure.
  • (b) dust diseases under the Dust Diseases
    Tribunal Act 1989
  • (c) personal injury damages where the injury or
    death concerned resulted from smoking or other
    use of tobacco products
  • (d) actions governed by Part 6 of the Motor
    Accidents Act 1988 and Chapter 5 of the Motor
    Accidents Compensation Act 1999 except the
    provisions that subsection (2) provides apply to
    motor accidents
  • (e) Workers Compensation Act 1987, Workers
    Compensation (Bush Fire, Emergency and Rescue
    Services) Act 1987, Workers Compensation (Dust
    Diseases) 1942, Victims Support and
    Rehabilitation Act 1996 or Anti-Discrimination
    Act 1977 or a benefit payable under the Sporting
    Injuries Insurance Act 1978

6
THE CIVIL LIABILITY AMENDMENT (PERSONAL
RESPONSIBILITY) ACT
  • Part 1A Division incorporates statutory reform to
    the law of negligence in Sections 5A to 5T
  • Commenced 6/12/02, except Section 5N applies to
    breaches of warranties which occur after 10/1/03
  • 5A scope of application
  • The part applies to any claims in negligence
    regardless of whether the claim is brought in
    tort, contract, under statute or otherwise

7
Duty of Care
  • S 5B(1) A person is not negligent in failing to
    take precautions against a risk of harm unless
  • (a) the risk was foreseeable (that is, it is a
    risk of which the person knew or ought to have
    known), and
  • (b) the risk was not insignificant, and
  • (c) in the circumstances, a reasonable person in
    the persons position would have taken those
    precautions.
  • (2) In determining whether a reasonable person
    would have taken precautions against a risk of
    harm, the court is to consider the following
    (amongst other relevant things)
  • (a) the probability that the harm would occur if
    care were not taken,
  • (b) the likely seriousness of the harm,
  • (c) the burden of taking precautions to avoid the
    risk of harm,
  • (d) the social utility of the activity that
    creates the risk of harm.

8
Duty of Care commentary
  • Section 5B(1) provides a person is not negligent
    unless (b) the risk was not insignificant.
  • Wyong Shire Council v Shirt (1980) 146 CLR 40
    risk must be real in the sense that a
    reasonable person would not brush it aside as
    far-fetched or fanciful.
  • It is unclear whether not insignificant in
    Section 5B(1)(b) is more restrictive than not
    far-fetched or fanciful in Wyong Shire Council v
    Shirt

9
Duty of Care s.5B(1) (2)
  • Waverley Council v Ferreira 2005 NSWCA 418
  • Facts
  • 15 December 2000 12 yr old boy died when he
    fell to the ground through a skylight in the roof
    of a building known as the Community Centre in
    Kimberley Park
  • - The boy was throwing a soft dart with a friend
    and mistakenly threw it onto the roof. He gained
    access to the roof by climbing a mesh fence
    attached to the building and undergrowth. The
    fence and undergrowth made it relatively easy for
    children to climb onto the roof. The fence had no
    utilitarian purpose as it had a gate without a
    lock.

10
s.5B(1)(a) - Waverley Council v Ferreira
  • Ipp JA (Spigelman CJ Tobias JA agreeing)
  • 34 The initial element to be determined under
    s5B(1) is whether the risk was foreseeable. As
    s5B(1)(a) makes plain, that involves inquiring
    whether the risk in question is one of which the
    defendant knew or ought to have known. The
    relevant risk in relation to the removal of the
    fence and undergrowth was the risk that children
    might use the fence and undergrowth to facilitate
    their access to the roof and, when on the roof,
    might fall to the ground.
  • 35 There can be no doubt that the Council knew or
    ought to have known that children frequently
    climbed on to the roof of the Community Centre.
    Children playing at the park were often seen on
    the roof. Mr Ferreira said that he saw children
    on the roof sometimes twice a week. Martins
    friend, Dima, said that on a few occasions he
    himself had climbed onto the roof. Some of Dimas
    friends had also climbed on to the roof as had
    other children. A witness testified that maybe
    weekly you could see at least one person up
    there.

11
s.5B(1)(a) - Waverley Council v Ferreira
  • Ipp JA (Spigelman CJ Tobias JA agreeing)
  • 39 It was reasonably foreseeable that, once on
    the roof, a boy might be attracted to the
    skylight and stand on it or otherwise in some way
    rest his weight upon it.
  • 41 ... Irrespective of whether the Council knew
    or ought to have known of the condition of the
    skylight it was reasonably foreseeable to the
    Council that a child who climbed on to the roof
    might come to serious harm by falling to the
    ground. Such a fall might be caused by an
    infinite variety of circumstances, impossible to
    identify in advance.

12
s.5B(1)(a) - Waverley Council v Ferreira
  • Ipp JA (Spigelman CJ Tobias JA agreeing)
  • 43 In my opinion, the relevant risk of injury was
    that a child such as Martin might fall to the
    ground once he had climbed on to the roof. In my
    opinion, that was a foreseeable risk in terms of
    s 5B(1)(a). It was a risk of which the Council
    knew or ought to have known. It is immaterial
    that the Council might not have been able to
    foresee the precise mechanism that caused Martin
    to fall.

13
Duty of Care
  • 5C Other principles
  • In proceedings relating to liability for
    negligence
  • the burden of taking precautions to avoid a risk
    of harm includes the burden of taking precautions
    to avoid similar risks of harm for which the
    person may be responsible , and
  • the fact that a risk of harm could have been
    avoided by doing something in a different way
    does not of itself give rise to or affect
    liability for the way in which the thing was
    done, and
  • the subsequent taking of action that would (had
    the action been taken earlier) have avoided a
    risk of harm does not of itself give rise to or
    affect liability in respect of the risk and does
    not of itself constitute an admission of
    liability in connection with the risk.

14
Assumption of risk
  • Injured persons presumed to be aware of obvious
    risks
  • 5G Injured persons presumed to be aware of
    obvious risks
  • In determining liability for negligence, a person
    who suffers harm is presumed to have been aware
    of the risk of harm if it was an obvious risk,
    unless the person proves on the balance of
    probabilities that he or she was not aware of the
    risk.
  • For the purposes of this section, a person is
    aware of a risk if the person is aware of the
    type or kind of risk, even if the person is not
    aware of the precise nature, extent or manner of
    occurrence of the risk.

15
s5G Obvious Risk
  • Falvo v Australian Oztag Sports Association
    Anor 2006 NSWCA 17 (2 March 2006)
  • The plaintiff injured his knee while playing
    Oztag (touch football) on the defendant council's
    field. The field had several sandy patches where
    the council had topped up' wear to the grass and
    the injury was suffered when the plaintiff
    stepped in one of these. Ipp JA, in his leading
    judgment, upheld the trial judge's finding that
    the field was in a fit condition and that the
    defendant was not liable. He found that the risk
    from the condition of the field was one
    substantially similar to many other fields used
    for amateur sport, and that the risk was obvious
    to all.

16
s5G Obvious Risk
  • Eutick v City of Canada Bay Council 2006 NSWCA
    30 (3 March 2006)
  • The plaintiff was a pedestrian who tripped over
    the ridge of a gully or depression in a roadway.
    In the leading judgment, Campbell AJA held that
    the risk was very obvious', as part of the
    normal incidents of life', and that it did not
    pose a significant risk. This was held to be the
    case in spite of the fact of the injury and the
    amount of traffic on the roadway which was said
    to have added to the risk. His Honour held the
    defendant council was entitled, having regard to
    the obviousness of the risk, and the limited
    nature of the hazard posed by it, to expect that
    the exercise of reasonable care for their own
    safety by pedestrians would obviate the need for
    any further response' to the risk.
  • His Honour added that s5(1)(b) CLA put the onus
    of proving that the risk was not insignificant'
    on the plaintiff, and that she had not discharged
    this.

17
Assumption of risk
  • 5H No proactive duty to warn of obvious risk
  • A person ( "the defendant" ) does not owe a duty
    of care to another person ( "the plaintiff" ) to
    warn of an obvious risk to the plaintiff.
  • This section does not apply if
  • (a) the plaintiff has requested advice or
    information about the risk from the defendant, or
  • (b) the defendant is required by a written law
    to warn the plaintiff of the risk, or
  • (c) the defendant is a professional and the risk
    is a risk of the death of or personal injury to
    the plaintiff from the provision of a
    professional service by the defendant.
  • (3) Subsection (2) does not give rise to a
    presumption of a duty to warn of a risk in the
    circumstances referred to in that subsection.

18
Assumption of risk
  • 5I No liability for materialisation of inherent
    risk
  • A person is not liable in negligence for harm
    suffered by another person as a result of the
    materialisation of an inherent risk.
  • An "inherent risk" is a risk of something
    occurring that cannot be avoided by the exercise
    of reasonable care and skill.
  • This section does not operate to exclude
    liability in connection with a duty to warn of a
    risk.

19
s5I Inherent Risk
  • Lormaine Pty Ltd v Xuereb 2006 NSWCA 200
  • The NSW Court of Appeal has held that a shipowner
    was liable for a woman's injuries when she was
    washed from the bow by a rogue wave'. One of the
    defences raised by the shipowner was that the
    waves were an inherent and obvious risk of
    dolphin-watching. However, the shipowner was
    unable to prove that the risk was obvious because
    the brochure had given the impression of a gentle
    cruise. Also, the ship's presence in a known
    wave zone' meant that the risk was avoidable,
    not inherent. The woman's damages were reduced,
    however, because the trial judge had not
    considered pre-existing conditions and the
    plaintiff had failed to alleviate the symptoms by
    losing weight.

20
Recreational activities
  • 5M No duty of care for recreational activity
    where risk warning
  • A person ( "the defendant" ) does not owe a duty
    of care to another person who engages in a
    recreational activity ( "the plaintiff" ) to take
    care in respect of a risk of the activity if the
    risk was the subject of a risk warning to the
    plaintiff.
  • If the plaintiff is an incapable person, the
    defendant may rely on a risk warning only if
  • (a) the incapable person was under the control
    of or accompanied by another person (who is not
    an incapable person and not the defendant) and
    the risk was the subject of a risk warning to
    that other person, or
  • (b) the risk was the subject of a risk warning
    to a parent of the incapable person (whether or
    not the incapable person was under the control of
    or accompanied by the parent).

21
Recreational activities
  • 5M No duty of care for recreational activity
    where risk warning
  • The fact that a risk is the subject of a risk
    warning does not of itself mean
  • (a) that the risk is not an obvious or inherent
    risk of an activity, or
  • (b) that a person who gives the risk warning
    owes a duty of care to a person who engages in an
    activity to take precautions to avoid the risk of
    harm from the activity.

22
Recreational activities
  • 5N Waiver of contractual duty of care for
    recreational activities
  • Despite any other written or unwritten law, a
    term of a contract for the supply of recreation
    services may exclude, restrict or modify any
    liability to which this Division applies that
    results from breach of an express or implied
    warranty that the services will be rendered with
    reasonable care and skill.
  • Nothing in the written law of New South Wales
    renders such a term of a contract void or
    unenforceable or authorises any court to refuse
    to enforce the term, to declare the term void or
    to vary the term.

23
Recreational activities
  • 5L No liability for harm suffered from obvious
    risks of dangerous recreational activities
  • (1) A person ( "the defendant" ) is not liable in
    negligence for harm suffered by another person (
    "the plaintiff" ) as a result of the
    materialisation of an obvious risk of a dangerous
    recreational activity engaged in by the
    plaintiff. (2) This section applies whether or
    not the plaintiff was aware of the risk.

24
s5L Dangerous Recreational Activities
  • Fallas v Mourlas 2006 NSWCA 32 (16 March 2006)
  • The plaintiff was holding a spotlight from a
    vehicle, while others shot the kangaroos. He was
    accidentally shot by the defendant when the
    defendant tried to unjam his weapon, despite
    having given the plaintiff assurances that the
    weapon was not loaded. The defendant argued it
    was an obvious risk in the course of a dangerous
    recreational activity (s5L CLA).
  • The court held unanimously (Ipp JA, Tobias JA and
    Basten JA) that spotlighting was a dangerous
    recreational activity'. Ipp JA and Tobias JA held
    that for the risk to be significant' (s5K) it
    must have been a somewhere between a trivial
    risk and a risk likely to materialise'. Ipp JA
    held that in determining whether a recreational
    activity was dangerous involved particularising
    and segmenting the activity where necessary.
  • The court held by majority (Ipp JA, Basten JA)
    that the risk that eventuated was not an obvious
    risk' (s5F) in the course of a dangerous
    recreational activity because of the defendant's
    assurances that the gun was not loaded. It
    therefore ruled in favour of the plaintiff.

25
Recreational Activities Trade Practices Act
  • Recreational Activities Sections 5J to N
  • - The NSW Govt could not exclude the operation of
    the Trade Practices Act 1974, although the
    Federal Govt has done so by passing The Trade
    Practices Amendment (Liability for Recreational
    Services) Act 2002 proclaimed on 19/12/02

26
Professional negligence
  • Sections 5O 5P
  • Peer professional opinion (or Bolam) test for
    determining the appropriate standard of care
  • Rogers v Whitaker (1992) 175 CLR 479
  • Cases involving a risk of injury or death arising
    from a professional service, community standards
    and other considerations may be applied by the
    court in determining the appropriate standard of
    care to be exercised.

27
Professional negligence
  • 5O Standard of care for professionals
  • A person practising a profession ( "a
    professional" ) does not incur a liability in
    negligence arising from the provision of a
    professional service if it is established that
    the professional acted in a manner that (at the
    time the service was provided) was widely
    accepted in Australia by peer professional
    opinion as competent professional practice.
  • However, peer professional opinion cannot be
    relied on for the purposes of this section if the
    court considers that the opinion is irrational

28
Mental harm
  • 27 Definitions
  • In this Part
  • "consequential mental harm" means mental harm
    that is a consequence of a personal injury of any
    other kind.
  • "mental harm" means impairment of a persons
    mental condition.
  • "negligence" means failure to exercise reasonable
    care and skill.
  • "personal injury" includes
  • pre-natal injury,
  • impairment of a persons physical or mental
    condition, and
  • disease.
  • "pure mental harm" means mental harm other than
    consequential mental harm.

29
Mental harm
  • 30 Limitation on recovery for pure mental harm
    arising from shock
  • (1) This section applies to the liability of a
    person ("the defendant) for pure mental harm to
    a person ("the plaintiff") arising wholly or
    partly from mental or nervous shock in connection
    with another person ("the victim") being killed,
    injured or put in peril by the act or omission of
    the defendant.
  • (2) The plaintiff is not entitled to recover
    damages for pure mental harm unless
  • the plaintiff witnessed, at the scene, the victim
    being killed, injured or put in peril, or
  • the plaintiff is a close member of the family of
    the victim. (eg Waverley Council v Ferreira
    2005 NSWCA 418)

30
Mental harm
  • 32 Mental harmduty of care
  • A person ("the defendant") does not owe a duty of
    care to another person ("the plaintiff") to take
    care not to cause the plaintiff mental harm
    unless the defendant ought to have foreseen that
    a person of normal fortitude might, in the
    circumstances of the case, suffer a recognised
    psychiatric illness if reasonable care were not
    taken.
  • Codifies the common law test for foreseeability
    of risk of mental harm in Tame v NSW Annetts v
    Australian Stations Pty Ltd 2002 HCA 35

31
Mental harm
  • 33 Liability for economic loss for consequential
    mental harm
  • A court cannot make an award of damages for
    economic loss for consequential mental harm
    resulting from negligence unless the harm
    consists of a recognised psychiatric illness.

32
Part 1A Duty of Care more commentary
  • Section 5B(1) provides a person is not negligent
    unless (b) the risk was not insignificant.
  • Wyong Shire Council v Shirt (1980) 146 CLR 40
    risk must be real in the sense that a
    reasonable person would not brush it aside as
    far-fetched or fanciful.
  • Is not insignificant in Section 5B(1)(b) more
    restrictive than not far-fetched or fanciful in
    Wyong Shire Council v Shirt ?

33
Part 1A Duty of Care more commentary
  • Recreational Activities Sections 5J to N
  • Issues of concern
  • Is the commercial incentive for the safe
    provision of recreational commercial activities
    gone?
  • What real bargaining power do consumers have in
    negotiating a contractual waiver?
  • Definition of recreational activity is broad and
    ambiguous.

34
Part 5 Liability of Public Other Authorities
  • Proclaimed on 6/12/02 Sections 40 to 46
  • Provides specific additional protection for
    public authorities including
  • the Crown
  • Government departments
  • Local councils
  • Other prescribed bodies

35
Part 5 Liability of Public Other Authorities
  • Section 42 sets out the principles to apply in
    determining whether a public or other authority
    has a duty of care or has breached a duty of care
    including
  • the functions required to be exercised by the
    authority are limited by the financial and other
    resources that are reasonably available to the
    authority for the purpose of exercising those
    functions,
  • the general allocation of those resources by the
    authority is not open to challenge,
  • the functions required to be exercised by the
    authority are to be determined by reference to
    the broad range of its activities (and not merely
    by reference to the matter to which the
    proceedings relate),
  • the authority may rely on evidence of its
    compliance with the general procedures and
    applicable standards for the exercise of its
    functions as evidence of the proper exercise of
    its functions in the matter to which the
    proceedings relate.

36
Part 5 Liability of Public Other Authorities
  • Section 43 an act or omission by an authority
    does not constitute a breach of a statutory duty,
    unless the act or omission so was unreasonable in
    the circumstances that no authority having the
    functions in question could properly consider the
    act or omission to be a reasonable exercise of it
    function.

37
Part 5 Liability of Public Other Authorities
  • Section 44 Removes the liability of public
    authorities for failure to exercise a regulatory
    function if the authority could not have been
    compelled to exercise the function under
    proceedings instituted by the Plaintiff.
  • Section 45 Restores the non-feasance protection
    for highway authorities taken away by the High
    Court in Brodie v Singleton Shire Council
    Council Ghantous v Hawkesbury City Council
    (2001) 206 CLR 512

38
S45 Hwy Immunity
  • Porter v. Lachlan Shire Council 2006 NSWCA 126
  • The appellant suffered a fractured right ankle
    when he accidentally put his foot into a hole in
    the nature strip between the made footpath and
    the gutter of a street in Condobolin.
  • The primary judge held that, but for s45 of the
    Civil Liability Act 2002, he would have found the
    Council liable on the ground that it should have
    known about the hole but he was not satisfied
    that the Council had actual knowledge of it.

39
s45 - Porter v. Lachlan Shire Council
  • 45 Special non-feasance protection for roads
    authorities(1) A roads authority is not liable
    in proceedings for civil liability to which this
    Part applies for harm arising from a failure of
    the authority to carry out road work, or to
    consider carrying out road work, unless at the
    time of the alleged failure the authority had
    actual knowledge of the particular risk the
    materialisation of which resulted in the
    harm....
  • (3) In this section carry out road work means
    carry out any activity in connection with the
    construction, erection, installation,
    maintenance, inspection, repair, removal or
    replacement of a road work within the meaning of
    the Roads Act 1993.roads authority has the same
    meaning as in the Roads Act 1993.

40
s45 - Porter v. Lachlan Shire Council
  • Hodgson JA (Beazley JA Giles JA agreeing)
  • 34 In my opinion, this case does come within s45,
    on either of two bases. 35 First, where that
    part of a road used for pedestrian purposes has
    been altered by the installation of a footpath
    and a gutter, leaving what may be called a nature
    strip in between, it is in my opinion an unduly
    narrow view of what constitutes a road work to
    say that, while the made footpath is a road work
    and the gutter is a road work, the nature strip
    between them is neither a road work nor part of a
    road work. In my opinion the better view is that
    the whole of the area for pedestrian purposes,
    comprising the made footpath, the nature strip
    and the gutter, comprises a road work.

41
s45 - Porter v. Lachlan Shire Council
  • Hodgson JA (Beazley JA Giles JA agreeing)
  • 36 Second, in any event, where there is a hole in
    that part of a road which is a nature strip
    within the area used for pedestrian purposes, it
    would be road work to fill and make good that
    hole. That view is not in my opinion precluded by
    the use of the words constructed and
    installed in the definition of road work in the
    Roads Act, which, unlike the relevant definition
    in s45 of the Civil Liability Act, is an
    inclusive definition and not an exhaustive
    definition. Once it is accepted that to fill and
    make good the hole would be road work, then the
    question would arise whether failure to do this
    would be failure to carry out any activity in
    connection with the construction, erection,
    installation, maintenance, repair or replacement
    of a road work within s45(3). In my opinion, it
    would be although the words construction and
    installation, and the indefinite article a in
    front of road work, could be taken as inapt for
    the filling and making good of a hole, on balance
    I think it would be too narrow an approach to
    hold that the words do not extend to such
    activity.

42
s45 - Porter v. Lachlan Shire Council
  • Hodgson JA (Beazley JA Giles JA agreeing)
  • 37 On either basis, s45 applies on the first
    basis, the allegation would be that the
    respondent failed to maintain a road work, and on
    the second basis, it would be that the respondent
    failed to construct or install a road work.

43
s.45 Actual KnowledgeNorth Sydney Council v-
Roman 2007 NSWCA 27
  • Ms Roman was injured at night when she fell in a
    pothole half a metre wide and about four to five
    inches deep in Princes Street, McMahons Point on
    16 October 2001. She brought proceedings against
    the Council, alleging that it had been negligent
    in failing to maintain the road by repairing the
    pothole. The Council defended the proceedings on
    the basis that it did not have actual knowledge
    of the pothole as required by s.45 of the CLA.
    The evidence established that Council street
    sweepers regularly swept the gutters in Princes
    Street in the vicinity of the subject hole. The
    street sweepers were instructed as part of their
    induction to identify hazards which needed
    attention and report them to their supervisor. Ms
    Roman argued at trial that the street sweepers
    actual knowledge of the pothole could be inferred
    from the regularity of those duties and from
    their obligation to identify hazards which needed
    attention. She also argued that their knowledge
    was attributable to the Council.

44
s.45 North Sydney Council v- Roman
  • The appellant did not call a street sweeper. It
    did call evidence from their supervisor and from
    people responsible for repairing potholes. All
    said they had not known of the pothole. They said
    that if they had they would have regarded it as a
    hazard. By the time of the trial the pothole had
    been repaired. None of the appellants witnesses
    was aware of how it had come to be repaired, nor
    did the appellant produce any records relating to
    its repair. The primary judge inferred the street
    sweepers had actual knowledge of the pothole and
    that, for the purposes of s.45, their knowledge
    could be attributed to the appellant. She also
    found the appellant had breached its duty of care
    by leaving the pothole in a place where a person
    getting into or out of a car might reasonably be
    expected to step. She awarded the respondent
    475,485 damages.

45
s.45 North Sydney Council v- Roman
  • On appeal the appellant submitted that to find
    actual knowledge for the purpose of s.45 it was
    necessary that there be a connection between the
    person with actual knowledge of the particular
    risk and the person able to, but who failed to,
    carry out the roadwork which would have avoided
    the harm which materialised. It argued that even
    if it was assumed a street sweeper had actual
    knowledge of the pothole, such knowledge was not
    sufficient because street sweepers did not carry
    out repairs.

46
s.45 North Sydney Council-v- Roman
  • Held, allowing the appeal, per Basten JA (Bryson
    JA agreeing)
  • 1. For the purposes of s.45 actual knowledge must
    be found in the mind of an officer within the
    council having delegated (or statutory) authority
    to carry out the necessary repairs.
  • 2. The evidence demonstrated that no Council
    officer at a decision-making level had actual
    knowledge of the particular pothole and
    therefore the appellant did not have such
    knowledge. Accordingly, the exception to s.45 was
    not engaged and the statutory immunity prevailed.
    Per McColl JA (dissenting)

47
Parts 8 9 Good Samaritans Volunteers
  • Proclaimed on 6/12/02 Sections 55 to 66
  • Parts 8 9 operate to protect Good Samaritans
    and volunteers.
  • Section 58 no protection if the Good Samaritan
    is under the influence of alcohol, impersonating
    a police officer or falsely representing that
    they have skills or expertise in providing
    emergency assistance.

48
Parts 8 9 Good Samaritans Volunteers
  • Section 60 Defines community work to mean work
    that is not for private financial gain and that
    is done for a charitable, benevolent,
    philanthropic, sporting, educational or cultural
    purpose. It excludes community service orders
    imposed by a court.
  • Section 61 No civil liability for a volunteer
    doing community work but does not extend to
    criminal acts, acts whilst intoxicated, a
    volunteer failing to exercise reasonable care and
    skill, actions outside the scope of the
    charitable organisation or contrary to
    instructions, where the volunteer is required by
    State law to be insured or motor vehicle
    accidents.

49
Breach of Duty General Principles
  • Wyong Shire Council v Shirt (1980) 146 CLR 40 per
    Mason J
  • In deciding whether there has been a breach of
    the duty of care the tribunal of fact must first
    ask itself whether a reasonable man in the
    defendants position would have foreseen that his
    conduct involved a risk of injury to the
    plaintiff If the answer is in the affirmative,
    it is then for the tribunal of fact to determine
    what a reasonable man would do The perception of
    the reasonable mans response calls for a
    consideration of the magnitude of the risk and
    the degree of the probability of its occurrence,
    along with the expense, difficulty and
    inconvenience of taking alleviating action and
    any other conflicting responsibilities which the
    defendant may have.

50
Breach of Duty Civil Liability Act
  • Civil Liability Act does not apply to claims
    excluded by Section 3B (eg. dust diseases, use of
    tobacco products, workers compensation)
  • Section 5B(2) In determining whether a reasonable
    person would have taken precautions against a
    risk of harm, the court is to consider the
    following (amongst other relevant things)
  • (a) the probability that the harm would occur if
    care were not taken,
  • (b) the likely seriousness of the harm,
  • (c) the burden of taking precautions to avoid the
    risk of harm,
  • (d) the social utility of the activity that
    creates the risk of harm.

51
s.5B(2) - Waverley Council v Ferreira
  • Ipp JA (Spigelman CJ Tobias JA agreeing)
  • 45 The matters set out in s5B(2), in substance,
    are a reiteration of Mason Js remarks in Wyong
    Shire Council v Shirt (1980) 146 CLR 40 at 47-48.
    ...
  • 51 Section 5B(2) provides a framework for
    deciding what precautions the reasonable person
    would have taken to avoid the harm and involves
    weighing the factors set out in ss5B(2)(a) and
    (b) against those in ss5B(2)(c) and (d) (subject,
    of course, to each being applicable in the
    particular circumstances of the case).
  • 52 In my opinion, the probability as to whether a
    reasonable person would have taken precautions
    against a risk of harm (referred to in s5B(2)(b))
    must be considered objectively by reference to
    the particular circumstances of the case (and the
    state of mind of the defendant is not relevant to
    this inquiry).

52
s.5B(2) - Waverley Council v Ferreira
  • Ipp JA (Spigelman CJ Tobias JA agreeing)
  • 53 ... s5B(2)(a) requires consideration to be
    given to the objective probability of harm
    occurring if care were not taken. In my view,
    there was a reasonable possibility of harm
    occurring if the fence and undergrowth were not
    removed and children were not prevented from
    using the fence or the undergrowth as a stepping
    stone to gain access to the roof. By s5B(2)(a),
    this possibility must be taken into account.
  • 54 The likely seriousness of the harm, should the
    risk materialise, was severe injury or death (s
    5B(2)(b)) (that is, in consequence of falling
    from the roof to the ground).

53
s.5B(2) - Waverley Council v Ferreira
  • 55 Garling DCJ found that the fence served no
    practical purpose and in my view he did not
    thereby err. There was a gate in the fence and
    the gate had no lock. It would not have been
    difficult to climb over the fence. There is
    nothing to suggest that there was a reason to
    retain the undergrowth. Both the fence and the
    undergrowth served no apparent utilitarian or
    aesthetic purpose and the burden of removing them
    would have been small (s 5B(2)(c)).

54
s.5B(2) - Waverley Council v Ferreira
  • 56 I have already mentioned that s5B(2)(d) (the
    social utility of the activity that creates the
    risk of harm) is not relevant in this case.
  • 57 Weighing the factors set out in ss5B(2)(a) and
    (b) against those in s5B(2)(c), I conclude that a
    reasonable Council would have taken the
    precautions of removing the fence and the
    undergrowth and Garling DCJ did not err in so
    holding.

55
Breach of Duty Likelihood of Injury
  • Section 5B(2)(a) the probability that the harm
    would occur if care were not taken
  • Bolton v Stone 1951 AC 850

56
Breach of Duty Seriousness of Risk
  • Section 5B(2)(b) the likely seriousness of the
    harm
  • Adelaide Chemical Fertilizer Co. v Carlyle
    (1940) 64 CLR 514
  • Paris v Stepney Borough Council 1951 AC 367

57
Breach of Duty Cost of Avoiding Harm
  • Section 5B(2)(c) the burden of taking precautions
    to avoid the risk of harm
  • Caledonian Collieries Ltd v Speirs (1957) 97 CLR
    202

58
Breach of Duty Utility of the Act of the
Defendant
  • Section 5B(2)(d) the social utility of the
    activity that creates the risk of harm.
  • South Australian Ambulance Transport Inc. v
    Walhdeim (1948) 77 CLR 215

59
Proof of Negligence - General
  • CIVIL LIABILITY ACT 2002 s.5E Onus of proof
  • In determining liability for negligence, the
    plaintiff always bears the onus of proving, on
    the balance of probabilities, any fact relevant
    to the issue of causation.
  • Holloway v McFeeters (1956) 94 CLR 470

60
Proof of Negligence Res Ipsa Loquitor
  • The action/thing speaks for itself
  • Nominal Defendant v Haslbauer (1967) 117 CLR 448

61
Damage in Negligence

Duty of care
Negligence
Breach
Damage
62
Damage in Negligence

Duty of care
Negligence
Breach
Damage
63
Damage in Negligence
  • Damage is the gist of the action in Negligence
  • The scope of actionable damage
  • property
  • personal
  • mental
  • pure economic loss
  • Damage must be actual for compensation no cause
    of action accrues until damage
  • Limitations period therefore begin from the time
    of the injurious consequences of a conduct not
    from when the conduct first occurred

64
Damage in Negligence
  • For P to be successful in an action in
    Negligence, Ds breach of duty must cause damage
    to P or his/her property

65
CAUSATION 1
Duty of Care
breach
damage
Negligence
causation
There must be a causal link between Ds breach of
duty and damage to P or Ps property
66
CAUSATION 2 THE ELEMENTS
  • Causation involves two fundamental questions
  • the factual question whether Ds act in fact
    caused Ps damage causation-in-fact
  • Whether, and to what extent D should be held
    responsible for the consequences of his conduct
    legal causation

67
CAUSATION-IN-FACT
  • Causation in fact relates to the factor(s) or
    conditions which were causally relevant in
    producing the consequences
  • Whether a particular condition is sufficient to
    be causally relevant depends on whether it was a
    necessary condition for the occurrence of the
    damage
  • The necessary condition causa sine qua non

68
CAUSATION
  • To be successful in a claim for a remedy, P needs
    to prove that the loss for which he/she seeks
    compensation was caused in fact by the Ds
    wrongful act
  • Traditionally, the test whether Ds wrongful act
    did in fact cause the loss is the but for test

69
THE BUT FOR TEST
  • But for the Ds conduct, the injury to P would
    not have happened
  • Waller v James (Wrongful life IVF case with
    failure to test or advise about the dangers of
    the fathers AT3 deficiency)

70
THE FUNCTION OF THE BUT FOR TEST
  • Two functions
  • The primary (negative) function is to assist in
    eliminating factors which made no difference to
    the outcome
  • The second (positive) function it helps to
    identify a condition or a factor which may itself
    then be subject to a test of legal causation

71
THE BUT FOR TEST IN THE HIGH COURT
  • Fitzgerald v Penn ( 1954) 91 CLR 268
  • Causation is all ultimately a matter of common
    sense.It is not susceptible of reduction to a
    satisfactory formula(per Dixon, Fullagar and
    Kitto JJ)
  • March v E MH Stramare (1991) 171 CLR 506The but
    for test gives rise to a well known difficulty in
    cases where there are two or more acts or events
    which would each be sufficient to bring about the
    plaintiffs injury. The application of the tests
    gives the results, contrary to common sense, that
    neither is a cause. The application of the tests
    proves to be either inadequate or troublesome in
    various situations in which there are multiple
    acts or events leading to the plaintiff's injury
    (per Mason J)

72
THE BUT FOR TEST IMPLICATIONS OF A COMMON
SENSE APPROACH
  • Bennett v Minister of Community Welfare (1992)
    176 408
  • if the but for test is applied in a practical
    common sense way, it enables the tribunal of
    fact, consciously or unconsciously, to give
    effect to value judgments concerning
    responsibility for the damage. If ..the test is
    applied in that way, it gives the tribunal an
    unfettered discretion to ignore a condition or
    relation which was in fact a precondition of the
    occurrence of the damages

73
THE BUT FOR TEST IS NOT EXHAUSTIVE
  • Bennett causation is essentially a question of
    fact to be resolved as a matter of common sense.
    In resolving that question, the but for test ,
    applied as a negative criterion of causation,
    has an important role to play but it is not a
    comprehensive and exhaustive test of causation
    value judgments and policy considerations
    necessarily intrude (per Mason CJ , Deane and
    Toohey JJ)

74
MULTIPLE CAUSES
  • Where the injury or damage of which the plaintiff
    complains is caused by Ds act combined with some
    other act or event, D is liable for the whole of
    the loss where it is indivisible where it is
    divisible, D is liable for the proportion that is
    attributable to him/her

75
MULTIPLE CAUSES TYPES
  • Concurrent sufficient causes
  • where two or more independent events cause the
    damage/loss to D ( eg, two separate fires destroy
    Ps property)
  • Successive sufficient causes
  • Baker v Willoughby
  • Faulkner v Keffalinos (1971) 45 ALJR 80
  • Jobling v Associated Dairies Ltd 1982(dormant
    spondylotic myelopathy activated)
  • Malec v Hutton 1990 169 CLR( possible future
    spinal condition)
  • D2 is entitled to take P (the victim) as he finds
    him/her
  • Where D2 exacerbates a pre-existing loss/injury
    (such as hasten the death of P) D2 is liable only
    for the part of the damage that is attributable
    to him

76
Causation Civil Liability Act
  • Section 5D General principles
  • (1) A determination that negligence caused
    particular harm comprises the following elements
  • (a) that the negligence was a necessary condition
    of the occurrence of the harm ("factual
    causation"), and
  • (b) that it is appropriate for the scope of the
    negligent persons liability to extend to the
    harm so caused ("scope of liability").

77
Section 5D Necessary Condition
  • Woolworths Limited v Strong Anor 2010 NSWCA
    282 (2 November 2010)
  • One level of the Centro Taree Shopping Centre
    contained 2 large retail shops separated by a
    common area, part of which operated as a food
    court. One of the large retail shops was Big W.
  • On 24 September 2004 at around 1230pm Ms Strong
    was at the shopping centre with her friends.
  • Big W had an exclusive right under its lease to
    conduct sidewalk sales within an area that was
    roughly square and extended 11 metres into the
    common area towards the food court from the
    frontage of the leased premises.

78
Woolworths Limited v Strong Anor 2010 NSWCA
282 (2 November 2010)
  • On the day in question there were two large plant
    stands with 3 or 4 racks on each stand in the
    common area outside Big W. There were pot plants
    on those racks. The stands themselves were about
    shoulder height. They were placed so as to create
    a corridor directly outside the Big W store, and
    leading directly to that store. The stands had
    been in that location from around 8am that day.
  • Ms Strong had undergone an amputation above the
    right knee decades before the accident. By using
    crutches, she had been able to achieve a high
    degree of mobility. On the day in question, she
    and her friends were going towards Big W. They
    passed between the two plant stands. The corridor
    created by the plant stands was wide enough for
    the three women to walk alongside each other.

79
Woolworths Limited v Strong Anor 2010 NSWCA
282 (2 November 2010)
  • Ms Strong was actively involved in keeping pot
    plants. She said, I went to look at the plant
    stand on my right and just after Id gone in
    thats when I had my fall.
  • The tip of her right crutch slipped from under
    her, and she fell heavily.
  • The trial judge accepted that there was a chip on
    the floor, that some grease had come from it, and
    that Ms Strong slipped when the end of her crutch
    came in contact with either the chip or the
    grease.
  • It is clear enough that the type of chip
    involved was a french fry, rather than a potato
    crisp or a small detached piece of flooring. The
    spot where Ms Strong fell was approximately 4
    metres from the entrance to the Big W.
  • The trial judge found that the place where Ms
    Strong slipped was within the area where Big W
    conducted sidewalk sales and it was within the
    occupancy, care and control of Big W.

80
Woolworths Limited v Strong Anor 2010 NSWCA
282 (2 November 2010)
  • Campbell J (Handley AJA Harrison J agreeing)
  • Before a court makes a finding that negligence
    caused particular harm, section 5D(1)(a) Civil
    Liability Act identifies, as one of the two
    elements that must usually be proved, that the
    negligence was a necessary condition of the
    occurrence of the harm. Negligence there has
    its defined meaning, arising from section 5 Civil
    Liability Act, of failure to exercise reasonable
    care and skill.
  • The statutory test for causation thus usually
    requires a decision about whether failure to
    exercise reasonable care and skill was a
    necessary condition of the occurrence of the
    harm. The test for causation under section
    5D(1)(a) has some measure of continuity with the
    previous common law, because if A is a necessary
    condition for the occurrence of B, one can always
    say that B would not happen but for A.

81
Woolworths Limited v Strong Anor 2010 NSWCA
282 (2 November 2010)
  • Campbell J (Handley AJA Harrison J agreeing)
  • When causation was decided according to the
    common law, it was held that a defendant having
    materially increased the risk of an injury of a
    particular type occurring is not the same as the
    defendant having materially contributed to (and
    thus, according to the common law, caused) a
    particular injury of that type that has occurred
    Bendix Mintex Pty Ltd v Barnes (1997) 42 NSWLR
    307 at 316 per Mason P.
  • It is only if the necessary condition test in
    section 5D(1)(a) is satisfied that there can be
    causation within the meaning of section 5D(1).
    That is because section 5D(1)(b) poses a further
    test (ie, that it is appropriate for the scope of
    the negligent persons liability to extend to the
    harm so caused), that is to be applied even if
    the necessary condition test is satisfied. In
    other words, section 5D(1)(b) operates as a means
    by which causation might not be found, even if
    the necessary condition test of section
    5D(1)(a) were to be satisfied.

82
Woolworths Limited v Strong Anor 2010 NSWCA
282 (2 November 2010)
  • Campbell J (Handley AJA Harrison J agreeing)
  • The reasons of the trial judge do not engage
    in a process of deciding what it was that Big W
    failed to do that the taking of reasonable care
    required it to do, and then whether that failure
    to take reasonable care was a necessary condition
    of the occurrence of the particular harm that Ms
    Strong sustained.
  • Thus, the trial judge has not decided the case
    in the way the statute requires. ... That the
    chip was able to be seen after the accident says
    nothing about whether the presence of one or more
    Woolworths employees in the area was adequate
    for the taking of reasonable care. To say it
    should have been removed is to express a
    conclusion, but not one arrived at by the type of
    reasoning the statute requires. ... This Court
    must examine the question of causation of damage
    for itself.

83
Woolworths Limited v Strong Anor 2010 NSWCA
282 (2 November 2010)
  • Campbell J (Handley AJA Harrison J agreeing)
  • In circumstances where Big W had no relevant
    cleaning system at all, it is easy to conclude
    that it breached its duty of care to Ms Strong.
    However, it is not possible to decide whether the
    breach of duty was a necessary condition of the
    particular harm without giving consideration to
    what the minimum content of the obligation to
    take reasonable care to prevent patrons from
    slipping would have been.
  • The present is not, however, a case in which
    proof of breach of duty in itself makes likely
    that, had the duty been performed, the damage
    would not have been caused. That is because there
    is no evidence that would justify a conclusion
    that taking reasonable care, in the present case,
    required the continuous presence of someone
    always on the lookout for potential slippery
    substances. Periodical inspections and cleanings
    were all that reasonable care required.

84
Woolworths Limited v Strong Anor 2010 NSWCA
282 (2 November 2010)
  • In my view, there is no basis for concluding, in
    the present case, that the chip had been on the
    ground for long enough for it to be detected and
    removed by the operation of a reasonable cleaning
    system. There was no evidence of there being
    anything about the physical appearance of the
    chip, such as it being dirty, that might provide
    the ground for an inference that it had been
    there for some time. There was no basis for
    concluding that the chip could have been dropped
    at any time of the day, or at least for
    concluding that it was more likely than not that
    it was not dropped comparatively soon before the
    First Respondent slipped. There was no basis for
    inferring whether the grease stain was
    something that had spontaneously oozed from the
    chip as it lay on the ground, or had fallen with
    it (in either case existing and being visible
    before the fall), rather than that it had been
    squeezed out of the chip as the crutch compressed
    and moved it.

85
Woolworths Limited v Strong Anor 2010 NSWCA
282 (2 November 2010)
  • There was no evidence concerning the temperature
    of the chip from any other witness. The fact that
    the cleaning contractor engaged a second cleaner,
    with special duties that included (but were not
    confined to) attending to the food court area
    from 1100am to 200pm provides some basis for
    believing that there was an increased risk of
    things being dropped in that area during the time
    period. The site of the accident was very close
    to the food court. The time the accident
    occurred, at 1230pm, fits comfortably within the
    range of time at which people ordinarily eat
    lunch. However, that fact does not assist in
    concluding how long it was likely to have been
    there.
  • There was no evidence on the basis of which a
    judge could conclude that the taking of
    reasonable care to prevent physical injury to
    people within the sidewalk sales area involved
    any higher degree of diligence or vigilance than
    was applied immediately outside the perimeter of
    the sidewalk sales area.

86
Woolworths Limited v Strong Anor 2010 NSWCA
282 (2 November 2010)
  • Campbell J (Handley AJA Harrison J agreeing)
  • In the present case, if one were to ask whether
    the First Respondent would not have been injured
    if the Appellant had in place a reasonable system
    for detecting and removing potentially slippery
    substances, one can answer maybe. In my view
    the evidence does not enable the answer more
    likely than not to be given. In the
    circumstances, the First Respondent did not
    establish causation of damage.

87
THE ELEMENTS OF CAUSATION
Causation
Legal
Factual (Causation in fact)
88
THE ELEMENTS OF CAUSATION
Causation
Legal
Factual (Causation in fact)
89
LEGAL CAUSATION
  • Factual causation in itself is not necessarily
    sufficient as a basis for Ds liability
  • To be liable, Ds conduct must be the proximate
    cause of Ps injury
  • Ps harm must not be too remote from Ds conduct

90
REMOTENESS
  • The law cannot take account of everything that
    follows a wrongful act it regards some matters
    as outside the scope of its selection. In the
    varied wave of affairs, the law must abstract
    some consequences as relevant, not perhaps on
    grounds of pure logic but simply for practical
    reasons Per Lord Wright Liebosch Dredger v SS
    Edison 1933 AC 449

91
Case Law on Remoteness
  • Earlier position in Common Law
  • Re Polemis- the directness element
  • The current position
  • The Wagon Mound (No. 1)
  • The Wagon Mound (No. 2)

92
INTERVENING ACT
  • An intervening act breaks the chain of causation
    and may relieve D of liability. To be sufficient
    to break the chain, it must either be a
  • human action that is properly to be regarded as
    voluntary or a causally independent event the
    conjunction of which with the wrongful act in or
    omission is by ordinary standards so extremely
    unlikely as to be turned a coincidence ( Smith J
    Haber v Walker 1963 VR 339

93
INTERVENING ACT 2
  • A foreseeable intervening act does not break
    the chain of causation
  • Chapman v Hearse
  • Negligent medical treatment subsequent to
    negligent injury would not necessarily remove
    liability for D1 unless the subsequent injury was
    inexcusably bad, so obviously unnecessary or
    improper that it fell outside the bounds of
    reputable medical practice
  • (Mahony v J Kruschich Demolitions)

94
THE LAW OF TORTS
  • PARTICULAR DUTY AREAS
  • Products Liability(b) Defective Structures(c)
    Nervous Shock(d) Hoteliers/Clubs
  • (e) Pure Eco Loss(f) Negligent Misstatement(g)
    Liability of Statutory Authorities

95
PRODUCT LIABILITY
  • Common law
  • Donohue v Stevenson 1932 AC 562
  • Grant v Australian Knitting Mills 1936 AC 85

96
PRODUCT LIABILITY
  • Relevant Statutes
  • Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW)
  • Pt 4 Performance of the Contract (ss.30 to 40)
  • Pt 5 Rights of the Unpaid Seller Against the
    Goods (ss.41 to 50)
  • Pt 6 Actions for Breach of the Contract (ss.51
    to 56)

97
PRODUCT LIABILITY
  • Relevant Statutes
  • Fair Trading Act (NSW)
  • Pt 4 Consumer Protection (ss.38 to 40)
  • Pt 5 Fair Trading (ss.41 to 60, including s.42
    Misleading or deceptive conduct and s.44 False
    representations)

98
PRODUCT LIABILITY
  • Relevant Statutes
  • Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth)
  • Pt V Div 1 Consumer Protection (ss.51AF to
    65A, including s.52 Misleading and deceptive
    conduct)
  • Pt V Div 2A Actions against manufacturers and
    importers of goods (ss.74A to 74L)
  • Pt VA Liability of manufacturers and importers
    for defective goods

99
DEFECTIVE STRUCTURES
  • Professional negligence
  • s.5O Civil Liability Act 2002 Peer professional
    opinion (ie. The UK Bolam test)
  • S.5P Civil Liability Act 2002 Duty to warn
    remains (ie. Rogers v Whittaker)
  • Builders
  • Bryan v Maloney (1995) ATR 81- 320
  • Architects
  • Voli v Inglewood Shire Council (1963) 110 CLR
    74

100
DEFECTIVE STRUCTURES
  • Councils Statutory Authorities
  • Pt 5 Civil Liability Act 2002, especially s.42
    determining duty of care and breach of duty in
    relation to functions, allocation of resources,
    range of activities and reliance on general
    procedures/applicable standards
  • Common law
  • Heyman v Sutherland Shire Council (1985) 157 CLR
    424
  • Shaddock v Parramatta CC No.1 (1981) 150 CLR
    424
  • Parramatta CC v Lutz (1988) 12 NSWLR 293

101
NERVOUS SHOCK
  • What is nervous shock
  • An identifiable mental injury recognised in
    medical terms as a genuine psychiatric illness.
  • The sudden sensory perception that , by seeing
    hearing or touching of a person, thing or
    event, which is so distressing that the
    perception of the phenomenon affronts or insults
    the plaintiffs mind and causes a recognizable
    psychiatric illness
  • It is a question of fact whether it is reasonably
    foreseeable that the sudden perception of that
    phenomenon might induce psychiatric.
  • Pt 3 Civil Liability Act 2002 Mental harm
    (ss.27 to 33), especially
  • S.30 Limitation on recovery for pure mental harm
    arising from shock ie. Witness at the scene the
    victim being killed, injured or put in peril, or
    the plaintiff is a close family member of the
    victim
  • S.32 Duty of care ie. Defendant ought to have
    foreseen that a person of normal fortitude might
    suffer a recognisable psychiatric illness if
    reasonable care were not taken.

102
Nervous ShockThe The Nature of the Harm
  • The notion of psychiatric illness induced by
    shock is a compound, not a simple, idea. Its
    elements are, on the one hand, psychiatric
    illness and, on the other, shock which causes it.
    Liability in negligence for nervous shock depends
    upon the reasonable foreseeability of both
    elements and of the causal relationship between
    them
  • Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
  • Pathological grief disorder

103
THE VICTIMS
  • Primary victims
  • What needs to be reasonably foreseeable ? Some
    personal injury, physical or psychiatric, to the
    primary victim
  • Page v Smith 1996 1 AC 155 (HL) a victim of a
    road accident caused by another's negligence
    claimed damages solely for psychiatric illness
  • Secondary Victims
  • Close relationship
  • Jaensch v Coffey
  • S.30 Civil Liability Act Close member of the
    family and spouse or partner defined
  • proximity/nearness to accident or aftermath
  • Bourhill v Young
  • Mount Isa Mines v Pusey
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